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Description:All his life Henry has been a nice guy. The man who lives to turn the other cheek. But things are about to change. Betrayed by an unfaithful wife belittled by an overbearing boss and cheated out of a fortune by his best friend. Henry has been pushed to the edge of sanity. Stripped of everything including his identity Henry wakes into a nightmare world where he has been left without a face. In a bloody rampage of revenge Henry sets out to destroy those who have betrayed him. Written and directed by horror legend George Romero comes Bruiser the blood curdling tale of how far a normal man would go to regain what others have taken.All his life Henry has been a nice guy. The man who lives to turn the other cheek. But things are about to change. Betrayed by an unfaithful wife belittled by an overbearing boss and cheated out of a fortune by his best friend. Henry has been pushed to the edge of sanity. Stripped of everything including his identity Henry wakes into a nightmare world where he has been left without a face. In a bloody rampage of revenge Henry sets out to destroy those who have betrayed him. Written and directed by horror legend George Romero comes Bruiser the blood curdling tale of how far a normal man would go to regain what others have taken.System Requirements: Running Time 99 MinFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: HORROR Rating: R UPC: 031398777229 Manufacturer No: VM7772D

After an eight-year hiatus, George Romero makes his long-awaited cinematic return with the visceral Bruiser, a savage and unsettling take on Kafka's The Metamorphosis as a Death Wish revenge fantasy. Jason Flemyng stars as an emotional doormat who, ground down by years of abuse by his boss (Peter Stormare) and humiliation by his wife, wakes up one morning to find his face missing. He's the ultimate anonymous man, and he's mad as hell and not going to take it anymore. Painting his masklike visage like a tribal warrior, he hunts down and kills his tormentors. Romero takes an odd pleasure in Flemyng's perverse self-help campaign, as if his savage explosion is some form of primitive personal growth. Lacking the irony and complexity of Romero's best work (Dawn of the Dead, Martin), Bruiser turns into little more than a sophisticated revenge picture with inspired moments of black humor. --Sean Axmaker